Sunday, December 19, 2010

Candy Cane Lane

In keeping with the Holiday spirit, I have condensed the Twelve Days of Christmas into six days, where each day there will be a different nail design, up until Christmas Day.

First up, Candy Cane Stripes!

image from wikimedia.org

The two nail polishes used in this manicure were OPI Alpine Snow Matte and American Apparel Downtown LA.

Paint on your base coat color. For the candy cane stripes, it makes it easier if you paint the white layer on before the red layer, rather than trying to layer white over red.

I used a matte white because of its quick drying time, and the stark whiteness of Alpine Snow Matte, to better contrast the bright red polish I am layering on top.

For Step 2, using your scissors or an X-acto knife, cut very thin strips of blue painter's tape, trying to keep each strip relatively even to all the rest.

One the nail, lay down the tape strips so that the white/negative space inbetween the tape will represent where the red polish will be. The idea is to have a repeating pattern of one large red stripe surrounded by two smaller red stripes on both sides of the large stripe.

Depending on how long your nails are, you can repeat this pattern up and down the length of each nail to have a complete candy cane effect.

Paint the red nail polish following the length of the tape to get an even coverage. It is fine to completely cover the nail (with the tape on) in the red polish, just as long as you make sure to press down firmly on all tape strips so there are no gaps where polish can squeeze under. When pealing off the tape, make sure to do so right after painting, removing the tape by pulling it in the same direction in which it is on the nail.

For Step 3, simply add top coat.

I did not wait long enough after painting my layer of red polish, so I had a bit of streaking where the red overlaps the white, but this will not be a problem if you give your second layer of polish (the red layer) enough time to dry. Rather, while you can sometimes layer top coat over polish that is a bit dry to speed up the drying process, here I would recommend to wait until the second layer is completely dry before adding a top coat.

And here is the final look....

Days 1 and 2 of Christmas are complete! I hope you've enjoyed this Candy Cane look. Feel free to experiment with the size of striping, the number of stripes, the colors used for your candy cane stripes, or anything else you feel like trying.

On the first day of Christmas my true love gave to me,a partridge in a pear tree.

On the second day of Christmas my true love gave to metwo turtle dovesand a partridge in a pear tree.

@Lisa: I've seen some very good nail art done with a striping brush, but alas, that's why I have to use blue painter's tape...I'm not so good with free handed nail art. I'm sure your candy cane stripes will come out lovely, and I'd love to see if you do try!

@Cores da Ju: Thank you for the complement!

@Carolina: Thank you!

@Jin: I just checked out your Candy Cane manicure and I don't know what you are talking about when you say it isn't neat - it's beautiful (love the extra touch of the flowers)!

Thank you for stopping by my blog and leaving a comment! I love to hear from everyone that shares a love of nail polish and painter's tape! Please respect my blog and do not leave links in the comments. If you leave a link, your comment will be treated as spam and will be dealt with accordingly.

Follow by Email

Instagram

Follow this blog with Bloglovin'

Followers

Disclosure Policy:

This policy is valid from 07 February 2010

This blog is a personal blog written and edited by me. For questions about this blog, please contact Cyan (bluetapenails at gmail dot com).

This blog does not accept any form of cash advertising, sponsorship, or paid topic insertions. However, we will and do accept and keep free products, services, travel, event tickets, and other forms of compensation from companies and organizations.

This blog abides by word of mouth marketing standards. We believe in honesty of relationship, opinion and identity. The compensation received from goods or services sent by companies for review may influence the topics or posts made in this blog. That content or post will be clearly identified as paid or sponsored content.

The owner of this blog is not compensated to provide opinion on products, services, websites, and various other topics. The views and opinions expressed on this blog are purely the blog owner's. If (we) claim or appear to be experts on a certain topic or product or service area, (we) will only endorse products or services that (we) believe, based on our expertise, are worthy of such endorsement. Any product claim, statistic, quote or other representation about a product or service should be verified with the manufacturer or provider.

This blog does not contain any content which might present a conflict of interest.